Pediatric trauma and emergency surgery: an international cross-sectional survey among WSES members.

IF 6 1区 医学 Q1 EMERGENCY MEDICINE World Journal of Emergency Surgery Pub Date : 2023-01-13 DOI:10.1186/s13017-022-00473-5
Martin Reichert, Massimo Sartelli, Ingolf H Askevold, Jaqueline Braun, Markus A Weigand, Matthias Hecker, Vanni Agnoletti, Federico Coccolini, Fausto Catena, Winfried Padberg, Jens G Riedel, Andreas Hecker
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background: In contrast to adults, the situation for pediatric trauma care from an international point of view and the global management of severely injured children remain rather unclear. The current study investigates structural management of pediatric trauma in centers of different trauma levels as well as experiences with pediatric trauma management around the world.

Methods: A web-survey had been distributed to the global mailing list of the World Society of Emergency Surgery from 10/2021-03/2022, investigating characteristics of respondents and affiliated hospitals, case-load of pediatric trauma patients, capacities and infrastructure for critical care in children, trauma team composition, clinical work-up and individual experiences with pediatric trauma management in response to patients´ age. The collaboration group was subdivided regarding sizes of affiliated hospitals to allow comparisons concerning hospital volumes. Comparable results were conducted to statistical analysis.

Results: A total of 133 participants from 34 countries, i.e. 5 continents responded to the survey. They were most commonly affiliated with larger hospitals (> 500 beds in 72.9%) and with level I or II trauma centers (82.0%), respectively. 74.4% of hospitals offer unrestricted pediatric medical care, but only 63.2% and 42.9% of the participants had sufficient experiences with trauma care in children ≤ 10 and ≤ 5 years of age (p = 0.0014). This situation is aggravated in participants from smaller hospitals (p < 0.01). With regard to hospital size (≤ 500 versus > 500 in-hospital beds), larger hospitals were more likely affiliated with advanced trauma centers, more elaborated pediatric intensive care infrastructure (p < 0.0001), treated children at all ages more frequently (p = 0.0938) and have higher case-loads of severely injured children < 12 years of age (p = 0.0009). Therefore, the majority of larger hospitals reserve either pediatric surgery departments or board-certified pediatric surgeons (p < 0.0001) and in-hospital trauma management is conducted more multi-disciplinarily. However, the majority of respondents does not feel prepared for treatment of severe pediatric trauma and call for special educational and practical training courses (overall: 80.2% and 64.3%, respectively).

Conclusions: Multi-professional management of pediatric trauma and individual experiences with severely injured children depend on volumes, level of trauma centers and infrastructure of the hospital. However, respondents from hospitals at all levels of trauma care complain about an alarming lack of knowledge on pediatric trauma management.

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儿科创伤和急诊外科:WSES成员的国际横断面调查。
背景:与成人相比,从国际角度来看,儿童创伤护理的情况和严重受伤儿童的全球管理仍然相当不清楚。目前的研究调查了不同创伤程度的中心对儿童创伤的结构性管理以及世界各地儿童创伤管理的经验。方法:从2021年10月至2022年3月,通过网络调查向世界急诊外科学会的全球邮件列表发送问卷,调查受访者及其附属医院的特征、儿科创伤患者的病例量、儿童重症监护的能力和基础设施、创伤团队的组成、临床检查和针对患者年龄的儿科创伤管理的个人经验。根据附属医院的规模对合作组进行细分,以便对医院数量进行比较。比较结果进行统计分析。结果:共有来自5大洲34个国家的133名参与者参与了调查。他们最常隶属于大型医院(床位大于500张的占72.9%)和一级或二级创伤中心(82.0%)。74.4%的医院提供无限制的儿科医疗服务,但只有63.2%和42.9%的参与者有足够的创伤护理经验≤10岁和≤5岁儿童(p = 0.0014)。这种情况在小型医院的参与者中更为严重(p 500住院床位),大型医院更有可能隶属于先进的创伤中心,更完善的儿科重症监护基础设施(p结论:儿科创伤的多专业管理和严重受伤儿童的个人经验取决于医院的数量、创伤中心的水平和基础设施)。然而,来自各级创伤护理医院的受访者抱怨儿科创伤管理知识的缺乏令人震惊。
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来源期刊
World Journal of Emergency Surgery
World Journal of Emergency Surgery EMERGENCY MEDICINE-SURGERY
CiteScore
14.50
自引率
5.00%
发文量
60
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The World Journal of Emergency Surgery is an open access, peer-reviewed journal covering all facets of clinical and basic research in traumatic and non-traumatic emergency surgery and related fields. Topics include emergency surgery, acute care surgery, trauma surgery, intensive care, trauma management, and resuscitation, among others.
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